Now showing items 26-30 of 30

    • The invisible sublime : theories of art in Carl Einstein's later writings 

      Creighton, Nicola (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Germanic Studies, 2004)
      This study is a contribution to research on Carl Einstein (1885-1940), German-Jewish writer, critic and historian of art. It concentrates on Carl Einstein’s later work, from Die Kunst des 20. Jahrhunderts, his contribution ...
    • The Moon among Stars and The Throne in the Forest : Image and formula in the 'Nibelungenlied' and the 'Ramayana' 

      Dalzell, Pauline (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Germanic Studies, 2002)
      The point of reference in earlier comparative studies of epic featuring either the medieval German Nibelungenlied or the ancient Indian Ramayana as one component of the comparison has been narrative content, narrative ...
    • The wanderer motif in nineteenth century German literature 

      Cusack, Andrew (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Germanic Studies, 2007)
      The following study is conceived as a survey of the wanderer motif in 19th century German literature. The interpretive method used is a modified version of New Historicism, a method described in detail in the Introduction. ...
    • Theatre Lindenhof as a contemporary form of German regional Volkstheater 

      Stegall, Sorcha Ann (Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of Germanic Studies, 2017)
      This thesis studies Theater Lindenhof, a Volkstheater company in the Schwabisch-Alb, Baden-Wiirttemberg, Germany. Lindenhof performs from its own theatre in the small village of Melchingen and tours in Baden-Wurttemberg ...
    • Translingual Literary Practice: Literatures in Contact 

      ZUCCA, CLAUDIA (Trinity College Dublin. School of Lang, Lit. & Cultural Studies. Discipline of German, 2020)
      Abstract: A Translingual Literary Practice: Literatures in Contact The aim of this thesis is to explore literary translingualism. The translingual is a term that is becoming widespread in academia, but is still in need of ...